Wine Label Circle expand their sphere of influence

11 October 2003Written by Anne Crane

IF antique glass was the focal point of the celebrated Harvey’s Wine Museum collection, sold in three parts by Bonhams in the last month, then the first purchase for the fledgling museum in the mid 1950s had been the Pratt collection of silver wine labels.

For this popular collecting field, the dispersal on October 1
ranked comfortably among the best offerings of its type in recent
memory.

Predictably members of the Wine Label Circle turned out in
force. Along with what the auctioneers termed "plenty of new faces"
- a mix of Harvey's memento seekers and oenophiles looking for
unusual purchases - they were instrumental in producing a near
sell-out with just two of the 199 lots of silver left unsold. The
sale netted just under £170,000.

Wine labels weren't the only items on offer in this afternoon
session (bottle stands, wine funnels tasters and coolers also
featured), but they were its mainstay, swelled by the elements from
the massive collection formed by Edward Pratt, a founder member of
the Wine Label Circle.

The label selection contained a wide variety of different
examples of unusual names, shapes and desirable makers, as well as
plenty of more representative models. Accordingly it offered
something for everyone, from beginners to seasoned collectors.

Above: an early Victorian cast label with Teniers tavern
drinkers, marked for Edward Farrell 1842. It fetched £1200 at
Bonhams.

In the rarities class came two heraldic labels. One crescent
shaped for Port marked for the well-known Phipps and
Robinson partnership 1799 had a dolphin naiant
between the crescent horns (a crest shared by several different
families). The other, for Burgundy, was unmarked (many
armorial labels were not assayed) but, confidently dated to c.1790,
was fashioned as a sun in splendour charged with an armed foot, the
badge of Blount of Soddington, Worcestershire. Both of these easily
outstripped expectations to sell for £2200 and £1800.

Some very grand crescent shaped labels in silver-gilt fashioned
as lions' pelts with fruiting vine, by Paul Storr, were predictably
also up amongst the top lots, with a pair for Claret
and Madeira marked for 1815 fetching a
double-estimate £6000 and a single example for
Sherry of 1816 making £2100. A fourth example for
Claret to the same pattern but in silver came in at
a more modest £650, just under low estimate. Also in demand at
£1200 was a large 3in (7.5cm) wide cast label of extravagant design
by Edward Farrell, a well-regarded maker, 1842, fashioned as two
topers toasting one another with other Teniers-type tavern
characters to the bottom.

Equally there were plenty of opportunities to buy attractive
individual labels for under £200 or, in the case of the sauce
labels, to purchase small groups ranging from four to 13 specimens
for under £500.

Aside from the rarest labels, the big spending in this auction
was done in the other sections amongst the early French wine
tasters and most dramatically with a pair of silver-gilt double
coaster trolleys fashioned as intertwining branches of fruiting
vine, Benjamin Smith II hallmarked for 1828. This elaborate Regency
design is always popular when it comes up for sale and the Harvey's
model, which bore arms for Sir Jacob Astley, took £72,000.

Attractive rarities

Most of the 30-odd wine tasters in the sale were French 18th
century models, the most expensive of which was an attractively
engraved example at £2400, but there were some British rarities
that were keenly sought, none more than the porringer shaped
William and Mary period taster of c.1690, maker's mark
HE conjoined, with "snakeskin" finish to the lower
section, that trebled expectations, selling for £3200.

The Arts, Craft and Science of Wine, the third auction
from Harvey's Wine Museum on October 2, was the most eclectic of
the series and netted just over £122,000 with 252 of the 265 lots
finding buyers. It took in furniture, artwork for wine lists and
other pictures, corkscrews and scientific instruments used in the
manufacture and bottling of wine but also enamel and ceramic bin
and bottle labels.

Many of the latter were from the collection of George Delaforce
of the Delaforce Port family. These had been on loan to Harvey's
Museum and were offered for sale by his family.

Top price of £3400 went as expected to a mid-18th century
Battersea enamel wine label for White Portdecorated with a
design of two putti treading grapes based on an engraving by Simon
François Ravenet.

The auctioneers hadn't, however, predicted quite such high
prices for some of the 'coathanger' shaped labels fashioned in
English delft. Including the names of arcane beverages such as
Picolito, Calcavella, Mountain
and Neckar, these attracted considerable attention,
including interest from specialist pottery dealers, and several
were pursued to £1850 apiece.

Another ex-Delaforce piece that was much in demand was a
rosewood decanting machine for vintage port thought to be probably
French and of early 19th century date that was pursued to £9000.

The buyer's premium was 19.5/10%.

Antiques Trade Gazette is the weekly bible of the fine art and antiques industry. Read articles like this every week in the Antiques Trade Gazette or ATG app. Click here to subscribe today.